Clotel, William Wells Brown [i like reading books .txt] 📗
- Author: William Wells Brown
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“Not here, but about thirty miles from here, in the Sand Hill district; they are as ignorant as horses. Why it was no longer than last week I was up there, and really you would not believe it, that people were so poor off. In New England, and, I may say, in all the free states, they have free schools, and everybody gets educated. Not so here. In Connecticut there is only one out of every five hundred above twenty-one years that can neither read nor write. Here there is one out of every eight that can neither read nor write. There is not a single newspaper taken in five of the counties in this state. Last week I was at Sand Hill for the first time, and I called at a farmhouse. The man was out. It was a low log-hut, and yet it was the best house in that locality. The woman and nine children were there, and the geese, ducks, chickens, pigs, and children were all running about the floor. The woman seemed scared at me when I entered the house. I inquired if I could get a little dinner, and my horse fed. She said, yes, if I would only be good enough to feed him myself, as her ‘gal,’ as she called her daughter, would be afraid of the horse. When I returned into the house again from the stable, she kept her eyes upon me all the time. At last she said, ‘I s’pose you ain’t never bin in these parts afore?’ ‘No,’ said I. ‘Is you gwine to stay here long?’ ‘Not very long,’ I replied. ‘On business, I s’pose.’ ‘Yes,’ said I, ‘I am hunting up the lost sheep of the house of Israel.’ ‘Oh,’ exclaimed she, ‘hunting for lost sheep is you? Well, you have a hard time to find ’em here. My husband lost an old ram last week, and he ain’t found him yet, and he’s hunted every day.’ ‘I am not looking for four-legged sheep,’ said I, ‘I am hunting for sinners.’ ‘Ah’; she said, ‘then you are a preacher.’ ‘Yes,’ said I. ‘You are the first of that sort that’s bin in these diggins for many a day.’ Turning to her eldest daughter, she said in an excited tone, ‘Clar out the pigs and ducks, and sweep up the floor; this is a preacher.’ And it was some time before any of the children would come near me; one remained under the bed (which, by the by, was in the same room), all the while I was there. ‘Well,’ continued the woman, ‘I was a tellin’ my man only yesterday that I would like once more to go to meetin’ before I died, and he said as he should like to do the same. But as you have come, it will save us the trouble of going out of the district.’ ”
“Then you found some of the lost sheep,” said Carlton.
“Yes,” replied Snyder, “I did not find anything else up there. The state makes no provision for educating the poor: they are unable to do it themselves, and they grow up in a state of ignorance and degradation. The men hunt and the women have to go in the fields and labour.”
“What is the cause of it?” inquired Carlton.
“Slavery,” answered Snyder, “slavery—and nothing else. Look at the city of Boston; it pays more taxes for the support of the government than this entire state. The people of Boston do more business than the whole population of Mississippi put together. I was told some very amusing things while at Sand Hill. A farmer there told me a story about an old woman, who was very pious herself. She had a husband and three sons, who were sad characters, and she had often prayed for their conversion but to no effect. At last, one day while working in the cornfield, one of her sons was bitten by a rattlesnake. He had scarce reached home before he felt the poison, and in his agony called loudly on his Maker.
“The pious old woman, when she heard this, forgetful of her son’s misery, and everything else but the glorious hope of his repentance, fell on her knees, and prayed as follows: ‘Oh! Lord, I thank thee, that thou hast at last opened Jimmy’s eyes to the error of his ways; and I pray that, in thy Divine mercy, thou wilt send a rattlesnake to bite the old man, and another to bite Tom, and another to bite Harry, for I am certain that nothing but a rattlesnake, or something of the kind, will ever turn them from their sinful ways, they are so hardheaded.’ When returning home, and before I got out of the Sand Hill district, I saw a funeral, and thought I would fasten my horse to a post and attend. The coffin was carried in a common horse cart, and followed by fifteen or twenty persons very shabbily dressed, and attended by a man whom I took to be the religious man of the place. After the coffin had been placed near the grave, he spoke as follows:
Friends and neighbours! you have congregated to see this lump of mortality put into a hole in the ground. You all know the deceased—a worthless, drunken, good-for-nothing vagabond. He lived in disgrace and infamy, and died in wretchedness. You all despised him—you all know his brother Joe, who lives on the hill? He’s not a bit better though he has scrap’d together a little property by cheating his neighbours. His end will be like that of this loathsome creature, whom you will please put into the hole as soon as possible. I won’t ask you to drop a tear, but brother Bohow will please raise a hymn while we fill up the grave.
“I am rather surprised to hear that any portion of the whites in this state are in so low a condition.”
“Yet it is true,” returned Snyder.
“These are very onpleasant facts to
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